Gresik United Football Club, commonly known as GUFC, is an Indonesian professional football club based in Gresik, East Java. They currently compete in Liga 2, after promotion from Liga 3.

Gresik United
Full nameGresik United Football Club
Nickname(s)Laskar Joko Samudro
(Joko Samudro Warriors)
Kebo Giras
(The Mad Buffalo)
Short nameGRE
Founded2 December 2005; 19 years ago (2005-12-02)
Ground
Capacity40,000
OwnerPT Gresik Usaha Sejahtera
CEOMuhammad Allan
ManagerToriqi Fajerin
CoachStefan Keeltjes
LeagueLiga 2
2023–24Liga 2/Championship Round (Group Z), 2nd
Websitegresikunited.com
Current season

History

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The club was founded as Petrokimia Putra Gresik, which was established on May 20, 1988. The club was funded by the fertilizer company, PT Petrokimia Gresik, which has been active in the Liga Indonesia Premier Division for more than 15 years. Petrokimia Putra competed in Galatama, which at the time was a professional football league in Indonesia. Many big clubs from Galatama that were once in the same class with Petrokimia Putra are now already defunct, such as Krama Yudha Tiga Berlian, Bandung Raya, Warna Agung, Pardedetex Medan, Assyabaab Surabaya, Perkesa 1978, BPD Jateng, Yanita Utama, Makassar Utama, and Indonesia Muda. The clubs which are still surviving until now are Arema, Barito Putera, and Semen Padang and some of them now have their names changed, Niac Mitra now is known as Mitra Kukar, Pelita Jaya changed their name so many times until their recent current name, Madura United. PKT Bontang became Bontang FC and Petrokimia Putra merged with Persegres United and became Gresik United.[1]

When they first entered Galatama, Gresik already had Persegres Gresik playing in the same division. In fact, some of the first batch of Petrokimia Putra players were Persegres alumni. At that time, the enthusiasm of the people of Gresik was more inclined to Persegres than to Petrokimia Putra. Some of Petrokimia Putra's first batch of players who graduated from Persegres, including Sasono Handito, Ferril Raymond Hattu, Rubianto, Reno Latupeirissa, Karyanto, Abdul Muis, Masrukan, Lutfi, Hasan Maghrobi, Derry Krisyanto, and many others.[1]

When the first edition of Liga Indonesia Premier Division was held in 1994–95, Petrokimia Putra was given with title "Champion without trophy". Because, in the final at the Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, they lost to Persib Bandung with a score of 0–1. In fact, in that match, Petrokimia scored the first goal through Jacksen F. Tiago. However, the referee annulled for no apparent reason.[1]

Petrokimia Putra became the champion of 2002 Liga Indonesia Premier Division after beating Persita Tangerang at the final by a score 2–1. This achievement broke the hegemony of big city clubs in the main row of national football. Usually the league champions are won by teams from big cities. Unfortunately, in the next season, Petrokimia was relegated to Liga Indonesia First Division.[1] They qualified for the 2003 ASEAN Club Championship, which is the first edition of the Southeast Asia competition. This season they qualified to semi-final after defeating S.League club Singapore Armed Forces with a score of 3–2.[2]

On 2 December 2005 as a merger between two clubs from Gresik, which were Petrokimia Putra and Persegres Gresik. So Gresik United was established to replace Petrokimia Putra and Persegres, who once made City of Gresik the champion of Ligina.[3]

With their fanatical supporters, Ultras Gresik is famous for its noise when the club competes and creativity in its actions. Their identity was removed (2012 - 2019) with the addition of the identity Persegres in their first name (Persegres Gresik United) by the management who was said to be an investor at the time. in 2017, they played in 2017 Liga 1 and only managed to finish in the last position of the Liga 1 standings by only collecting 10 points from 34 games (2 wins and 4 draws). With that result, Gresik United were relegated to Liga 2.[4]

In 2018 Liga 2, they again experienced the same thing, where they only finished in 10th place out of 12 teams in the East Region of Liga 2, so they were relegated two consecutive seasons to Liga 3.[5] Until the 2021 season, Gresik United are still in the lowest tier of Liga 3. and in the 2021 Liga 3 East Java zone, they finished in 3rd position out of 69 clubs and they qualified for the National Round.[6]

Players

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As of 7 September 2024[7]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   IDN Dikri Yusron
2 DF   IDN Ade Kristiano
3 DF   IDN Joko Supriyanto
4 DF   IDN Samsul Arifin
5 DF   IDN Ilham Wibowo
7 MF   IDN Rossy Noprihanis
8 FW   IDN Faisol Yunus
9 FW   IDN Ivan Syahdana
10 MF   BRA Renan Silva (captain)
11 DF   IDN Aziiz Al Ghany
13 DF   IDN Soni Setiawan
14 MF   IDN Fadil Sausu
15 DF   IDN Airlangga Mutamasiqdina
16 MF   IDN Burhan Afiludin
17 MF   IDN Fahmi Al-Ayyubi
19 MF   IDN Malik Prayitno
21 DF   IDN Iswahyudi Ardinata
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 MF   IDN Ibnu Hajar
23 DF   UZB Azamat Abdullayev
25 FW   IDN Kahar Kalu
26 GK   IDN Ulul Arham
27 DF   IDN Putra Pradananta
31 GK   IDN Try Hamdani
35 MF   IDN Syahrur Ramadhani
39 MF   IDN Egi Regiansyah
44 FW   SRB Đorđe Maksimović
46 FW   IDN Wahyu Agong
57 MF   IDN Akbar Firmansyah
64 MF   IDN Antonius Tuna
66 MF   IDN Dicky Kurniawan
71 GK   IDN Visal Akbar
85 MF   IDN Dian Ardiansyah
96 MF   IDN Didan Paulista

Coaching staff

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Position Staff
Team Manager   Toriqi Fajerin
Head coach   Stefan Keeltjes
Assistant coach   Andik Ardiansyah
Physical Coach   Dimas Agung
Goalkeeper coach   Dedy Sutanto

Honours

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Continental record

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AFC Competitions

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Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1995 Asian Cup Winners' Cup Second round   Rajapracha UCOM FC 3–2 4–5 7–7 (a)
Quarter finals   Bellmare Hiratsuka 1–1 0–6 1–7
2002–03 AFC Champions League Qualifying round   Shanghai Shenhua 3–1 1–5 4–6

AFF Competitions

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Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2003 ASEAN Club Championship Group A   Samart United 2–0 1st
Quarter Final   Singapore Armed Forces 3–2 (a.e.t)
Semi Final   Kingfisher East Bengal 1–1 (p) 6–7
3rd Place Playoff   Perak FA 3–0 3rd place

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Sejarah Gresik United" (in Indonesian). Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  2. ^ "Pernah Jadi Peserta, Intip Kiprah Petrokimia dan Persita di ASEAN Club Championship". indosport.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  3. ^ "Petrokimia-Persegres Merger" (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 4 December 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  4. ^ "Setelah Terdegradasi dari Liga 1 pada 2017, Persegres Gresik United Terjun Bebas". bolasport.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  5. ^ "Persegres Gresik Terdegradasi dari Liga 2". bola.kompas.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  6. ^ "Gresik United sudah Memastikan Diri Lolos ke Liga 3 Nasional". www.jawapos.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  7. ^ "Daftar pemain tim Gresik United FC". ligaindonesiabaru.com (in Indonesian).
  8. ^ "Kilas Balik Petrokimia Putra Juara Liga Indonesia 2002". Bola.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 5 August 2021.
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